Review
"This book illuminates the lives and fates of Native Americans -- and the Spaniards with whom they came in contact -- with great care and unusual fairness, and is a model worthy of emulation." (New Mexico Historical Review)
"This is a major contribution to the theoretical literature on identity and to the history of northern Mexico and Latin America in general." (William L. Merrill, Curator of Anthropology, Smithsonian Institution)
Product Description
Winner, Thomas F. McGann Memorial Prize, Rocky Mountain Council on Latin American Studies, 2004
Southwest Book Award, Border Regional Library Association, 2003
In their efforts to impose colonial rule on Nueva Vizcaya from the sixteenth century to the middle of the seventeenth, Spaniards established missions among the principal Indian groups of present-day eastern Sinaloa, northern Durango, and southern Chihuahua, Mexico—the Xiximes, Acaxees, Conchos, Tepehuanes, and Tarahumaras. Yet, when the colonial era ended two centuries later, only the Tepehuanes and Tarahumaras remained as distinct peoples, the other groups having disappeared or blended into the emerging mestizo culture of the northern frontier. Why were these two indigenous peoples able to maintain their group identity under conditions of conquest, while the others could not?
In this book, Susan Deeds constructs authoritative ethnohistories of the Xiximes, Acaxees, Conchos, Tepehuanes, and Tarahumaras to explain why only two of the five groups successfully resisted Spanish conquest and colonization. Drawing on extensive research in colonial-era archives, Deeds provides a multifaceted analysis of each group's past from the time the Spaniards first attempted to settle them in missions up to the middle of the eighteenth century, when secular pressures had wrought momentous changes. Her masterful explanations of how ethnic identities, subsistence patterns, cultural beliefs, and gender relations were forged and changed over time on Mexico's northern frontier offer important new ways of understanding the struggle between resistance and adaptation in which Mexico's indigenous peoples are still engaged, five centuries after the "Spanish Conquest."
Review
"This is a major contribution to the theoretical literature on identity and to the history of northern Mexico and Latin America in general." (William L. Merrill, Curator of Anthropology, Smithsonian Institution)
About the Author
Susan M. Deeds is Professor of History at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.
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